E-Class (W212/C207/A207) [Official] Mercedes-Benz E-Class (W212)

The Mercedes-Benz W212 is the fourth generation of the E-Class range. Body styles: sedan/saloon (W212), estate/wagon (S212). Coupé and convertible models of the W212 E-Class generation are W204 C-Class based and known as the C207 and A207, replacing the CLK-Class (C209 and A209) coupé and cabriolet. Production: 2009–2016. Predecessor: W211 E-Class. Successor: W213 E-Class.
Absolutely. The beauty of the "E" is I think it's expected to be M-B's most durable car in many ways, as it's pretty much like the middle brother of the brand, expected to house many of the different virtues of all the other M-B cars in one. Some C virtues, some S, some sporty, some utilitarian, etc. etc.
 
When I was younger I fantasized about a cop chase in a nice Merc. Luckily living in Europe now you can pretty much do any speed you want on an autobahn , so it's no longer necessary.
 
^ When I was younger?...no way, I can't stop doing that even today :D But I prefer a chase in an old Benz, like this beautiful one on my avatar...only smell of gasoline and burning tires, without these electronic shts today:D
 
an update ;)

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As of last month the current E-Class sedan was sold more than 600,000 times since 2009, while the latest version of the station wagon found more than 100,000 customers. The E-Class sedan is in particularly high demand in China (including Hong Kong), the U.S. and in Germany, while the station wagon is very popular especially in Western Europe. The Cabriolet of the newest series of the E-Class was sold more than 60,000 times, while the current E-Class Coupé found around 50,000 customers. The great interest in the convertible and the coupe was primarily focused in the U.S. and in Western Europe. Translated from MB Passion
 
The E400 Hybrid comes packed with a 3.0-liter V6 direct-injection engine good for 302 horsepower and 273 pound-feet of torque, supplemented by an electric motor (rated at 27 hp and 207 lb-ft). Official fuel economy ratings haven't been released for the E400 Hybrid just yet, but preliminary data (and the big ol' number on the side of the car) suggests 24 miles per gallon in the city, 32 mpg highway and 27 mpg combined.
Uhh, the current E350 does that. In fact, I've gotten 32 mpg in the current E350 gas. The point of a hybrid is to improve (drastically) those city numbers. Most luxury hybrids, such as the Lexus GS450H are epic fails. They don't offer any significant boost in fuel mileage and just create major headaches down the road.
 
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How the hell does one pick up such speed and still steer like that with only 1 front wheel doing the work? I've said it years ago and I'll say it again, the E is the most durable car Mercedes makes when it comes police pursuits and accidentally knocking things down.


M

Agree, the E is like the Juggernaut of cars in pursuits.

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The C-Class could have done the same thing though. Both these cars share the same front suspension design.
 
A diesel hybrid makes much more sense than a conventional hybrid, because you get superior economy of a diesel engine, the electric motor brings the emissions down and the lithium ion battery pack means that boot capacity is not compromised. The E300 BH should be a hit with company car drivers. However, I think Mercedes should have launched the E300 BH already as a diesel plug-in hybrid.
 
I
Uhh, the current E350 does that. In fact, I've gotten 32 mpg in the current E350 gas. The point of a hybrid is to improve (drastically) those city numbers. Most luxury hybrids, such as the Lexus GS450H are epic fails. They don't offer any significant boost in fuel mileage and just create major headaches down the road.

I agree. More a marketing gimmick than anything else I reckon. Unless you do 99% of your driving in urban areas.
 
i just wonder what would be the image impact/problem if Mercedes/BMW/Audi hadn't done the hybrid thing. Clearly a diesel is better, but they were dragged into this by the market and the competition. These German hybrids just don't make sense, especially those that try to emphasize power + efficiency instead if frugality/MPGs. I'm starting to think they Germans should have just stuck to their guns with diesels, but their hybrids just don't sell, at least in the U.S. Their diesels do better.

M
 
27mpg, 6.7 to 60mph??? WHAT A JOKE!! BMW 528 has 28mpg and 5.8 to 60 without a Hybrid and cost $8000 less.​
 
That's nice, but you need to compare with respective engines.
Respective engines? Mercedes v6 engines can't come even close to 4-cyl BMW in performance not to mentioned fuel economy. If you compare 6 cylinder is even more embarrassing.
 
i just wonder what would be the image impact/problem if Mercedes/BMW/Audi hadn't done the hybrid thing. Clearly a diesel is better, but they were dragged into this by the market and the competition. These German hybrids just don't make sense, especially those that try to emphasize power + efficiency instead if frugality/MPGs. I'm starting to think they Germans should have just stuck to their guns with diesels, but their hybrids just don't sell, at least in the U.S. Their diesels do better.

M

It seems like for the luxury segment, Lexus seems to be the most stalwart defender of hybrids, the only one to have it as its core identity (eg. all flagships are hybrids). Yes, I believe the Germans should have stuck to their guns with diesels - but maybe it isn't so practical in Asian countries where petrol engines are still seen as a superior. Perhaps they did it due to the image issue, which is particularly important for China and India. Overall, I think it is a sound strategy to have a direct answer to Lexus and Infiniti... and still have diesels at the same time.
 
It seems like for the luxury segment, Lexus seems to be the most stalwart defender of hybrids, the only one to have it as its core identity (eg. all flagships are hybrids). Yes, I believe the Germans should have stuck to their guns with diesels - but maybe it isn't so practical in Asian countries where petrol engines are still seen as a superior. Perhaps they did it due to the image issue, which is particularly important for China and India. Overall, I think it is a sound strategy to have a direct answer to Lexus and Infiniti... and still have diesels at the same time.

I guess as long as they have the R&D budget to perfect both technologies then I guess it works. However just as some posts above point out, cars like the E400 are just outclassed within MB's own lineup and by the BMW 528i. I just don't ever see myself wanting or owning a hybrid outside of hyper sports car hybrid like the Porsche 918. Otherwise it just isn't worth it to me.


M
 

Mercedes-Benz

Mercedes-Benz Group AG is headquartered in Stuttgart, Germany. Established in 1926, Mercedes-Benz Group produces consumer luxury vehicles and light commercial vehicles badged as Mercedes-Benz, Mercedes-AMG, and Mercedes-Maybach. Its origin lies in Daimler-Motoren-Gesellschaft's 1901 Mercedes and Carl Benz's 1886 Benz Patent-Motorwagen, which is widely regarded as the first internal combustion engine in a self-propelled automobile. The slogan for the brand is "the best or nothing".
Official website: Mercedes-Benz (Global), Mercedes-Benz (USA)

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